| Literature DB >> 20562528 |
Stéphane Olivier1, Marine Jacoby1, Cédric Brillon1, Sylvana Bouletreau1, Thomas Mollet1, Olivier Nerriere1, Audrey Angel1, Sévérine Danet1, Boussad Souttou1, Fabienne Guehenneux1, Laurent Gauthier2, Mathilde Berthomé3, Henri Vié3, Nicola Beltraminelli1, Majid Mehtali1.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) represent the fastest growing class of therapeutic proteins. The increasing demand for mAb manufacturing and the associated high production costs call for the pharmaceutical industry to improve its current production processes or develop more efficient alternative production platforms. The experimental control of IgG fucosylation to enhance antibody dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity constitutes one of the promising strategies to improve the efficacy of monoclonal antibodies and to potentially reduce the therapeutic cost. We report here that the EB66 cell line derived from duck embryonic stem cells can be efficiently genetically engineered to produce mAbs at yields beyond a 1 g/L, as suspension cells grown in serum-free culture media. EB66 cells display additional attractive grown characteristics such as a very short population doubling time of 12 to 14 hours, a capacity to reach very high cell density (> 30 million cells/mL) and a unique metabolic profile resulting in low ammonium and lactate accumulation and low glutamine consumption, even at high cell densities. Furthermore, mAbs produced on EB66 cells display a naturally reduced fucose content resulting in strongly enhanced ADCC activity. The EB66 cells have therefore the potential to evolve as a novel cellular platform for the production of high potency therapeutic antibodies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20562528 PMCID: PMC3180087 DOI: 10.4161/mabs.12350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857